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Word: gray (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...girl's world out there.  Pop music has room only for nymphets. Actresses over 40 are invisible to the movie camera. But the literary world is different. A woman can have a few gray hairs and still count on being published. It's a good thing too, because two of the best writers alive, Annie Proulx and Alice Munro, are well along into their golden years. And they both have new collections of stories that prove golden is the word for what they...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Small Is Beautiful | 12/17/2004 | See Source »

...active ingredients. After the bogus salve was applied, scans showed that nerve activity in the brains of volunteers visibly changed. Regions involved in easing pain became more active, while areas involved in sensing pain quieted down. The expectation of relief seems to be self-fulfilling. Call it mind over gray matter...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Year In Medicine From A To Z | 12/17/2004 | See Source »

Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger pulled up in an SUV outside Mule Creek State Prison in the Sierra foothills. The Governor was in combat mode. Of all the legacies of dysfunction he had inherited from his predecessor, Gray Davis, the situation in the prisons was one of the most flagrant. Big campaign donations from the prison guards' union to Davis had ensured that the guards in 2002 won 34% wage increases over five years, and with overtime many were earning fat salaries; one pulled in more than the state's attorney general. But the work practices of the guards lagged. They seemed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Arnold Show | 12/17/2004 | See Source »

...newsroom is a factory. The desks and walls are industrial gray, the bulletin boards on its walls lined with frayed red construction paper. The long neon bulbs that hang overhead are suspended by a lattice of steel supports that angle down from what appears to be corrugated tin. Like a Pompidou Center minus the art, a network of unabashedly exposed rectangular ducts, pipes of varying thickness, massive red steel columns, and I-beams lined with coffee-mug-size rivets frame the edges of the room...

Author: By David B. Rochelson, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: End, Paper! No. Wait... | 12/16/2004 | See Source »

...each player provides a certain charming element of their own hilarity, which puts that extra dash of spice into the play’s already piquant brew. Levenson’s talent is not to be overlooked though he is hunched over throughout the play and dons a gray wig as he wiggles about the stage. So convincing was Levenson in his portrayal of the meddlesome old snoop that at first I didn’t even realize that the character was played by a student. Any time Levenson took the stage he wowed the crowd with his powerfully conveyed...

Author: By Mary CATHERINE Brouder, ON THEATER | Title: Review: Scandal Humors in British Farce | 12/13/2004 | See Source »

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